Valaam Monastery - Psalm 103 descargar videos gratis


92,295
Duración: 05:05
Subido: 2009/06/29

Psalm 103 chanted in English by the choir of Valaam Monastery.

Bless the Lord, O my soul! Blessed art Thou, O Lord.

O Lord my God, Thou hast been magnified exceedingly. Blessed art Thou, O Lord.

Confession and majesty hast Thou put on. Blessed art Thou, O Lord.

Who maketh His angels spirits, and His ministers a flame of fire. How glorious are Thy works, O Lord.

In wisdom hast Thou made them all. How glorious are Thy works, O Lord.

All things shall be filled with goodness. Glory to Thee, O Lord, Who hast created all.

I will sing unto the Lord throughout my life, I will chant to my God for as long as I have my being. Glory to Thee, O Lord, Who hast created all.

Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit: glory to Thee, O Lord, Who hast created all.

Both now and ever, and unto the ages of ages. Amen.

Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia, glory to Thee, O God.

Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia, glory to Thee, O God.

Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia, glory to Thee, O God.

Comentarios

6 years ago

Vicky Kentrota

Heaven on earth.God bless.

6 years ago

Austin Centolella

IC. XC....➕...NI. Ka.MP. Oy

8 years ago

Rada Mladenović

АМИН +++

8 years ago

Merilynn Andruchow

The best

9 years ago

Dean l

hospitality of Abraham

10 years ago

isaac Pappas

as indicated by, pjdraud, this is the old testament indication and acknowledgment of the holy trinity to abraham.

11 years ago

pjdraud

This is the famous icon of the Trinity (as three angels) visiting Abraham, by Andrei Rublev

11 years ago

GoxtA

halo my friend can you please help me find this ikona picture of the saints thank you? Господи слава ТЕБЕ

12 years ago

alexfo7o

@belladeballe Very nice. May the Lord and bless you. you will be illumined on Christmas?

12 years ago

valkeakorppi

@meusisto Genesis 18-19 - the three men visiting Abraham, two visiting Lot - has sometimes been interpreted as Trinitarian text. While the Church is not supporting this view, the three visitors became a symbol of Trinity in the icons. Remembering the icon is not for depicting sacral matters, it is sacral in itself as "a window to the heaven". (Hard to explain in my poor English). Andrei Rublev painted this particular icon of Holy Trinity.

12 years ago

valkeakorppi

@meusisto Abraham is not depicted as the icon represents Holy Trinity, i.e. God, not Abraham. Depicting the three angels visiting is the most common convention for Trinity in Eastern Orthodox art. There are representations showing Father as an old man with grey beard, Son sitting next to him, the Holy Spirit as a dove above them (in early versions Son as an infant sitting on His lap) but this is regarded as improper because no one has seen the Father and He has no likeness we could comprehend.

12 years ago

TheKomando007

"All things shall be filled with goodness" and there ist no more to say..

12 years ago

valkeakorppi

@fan2jnrc My dear friend. There is no such a thing as traditional orthodox liturgical language(s). God understands all languages, the service has always, from the very beginnings, been in vernacular, for people attending. In Greece it is in Greek, in Lebanon it is in Arabic, in Russia it is in Russian - in Paris St. Alexander Nevsky the language is Church Slavonic because of the emigrant roots of that particular church, because of their tradition, not of the Orthodox Church. - Christ is risen!

12 years ago

fan2jnrc

@valkeakorppi Maybe... But it's not a traditional orthodox liturgical languages... Nothing in the orthodoxy has something to do with English... It's just translation without authenticity... In Paris, in the cathedral St-Alexander-Nevsky, the wonderful ceremonies are in slavonic, not in french! I would'nt like to hear that liturgy in french...(???!!!) It just would be fiddle about with orthodox tradition... And it's the same in english...

12 years ago

valkeakorppi

@fan2jnrc English is an orthodox liturgical language like any other. I hear quite often English, besides with Russian, Swedish and (mostly) Finnish in the service - just according to the native languages of people present.

12 years ago

valkeakorppi

@meusisto Holy Trinity. This is the way to depict it - as the angels visiting Abraham.

13 years ago

Krombopoulos

@meusisto To evangelize? To provide beautiful chants that the Orthodox who speak English can understand? The reason matters not, I think. It certainly cannot be a bad one.

13 years ago

Krombopoulos

@fan2jnrc Orthodoxy has never had an "official" or "accepted" language. There has been a long tradition of adapting to the region Orthodoxy moves to. If this were not so, the Russians would worship in Greek! Why is it only permissible to worship God in some languages?

Videos Relacionados